British Columbia

Electric vehicle charging network grows across B.C.

The province has expanded its offers of EV charging areas including recently installing one in Fort Nelson as well as other northern and Vancouver Island communities. This effort is part of its "Electric Highway" network and climate action plan.

The province says all of the facilities will be in service before the end of September

EV charging station in Vanderhoof
Vanderhoof, a community located west of Prince George in northern B.C., now has an EV charging station. (BC Hydro)

Todd Penney, who owns Dalex Auto Services in Fort Nelson, B.C., said he got his first call from a driver who was searching for a way to charge an electric vehicle (EV) around six years ago. 

At the time, there were no charging stations in his northeastern B.C. community. Instead, it took "a little bit of ingenuity" from a local electrician to figure out that his welding plug could be the solution.

"He felt kind of lost," Penney recalled. "He didn't have enough power to go back and he didn't have enough to go forward, so he was pretty elated once we were able to get him charged up." 

His auto shop quickly became a destination for EV owners travelling through the region who were in need of a charge.

"As an advocate for tourism in the Northern Rockies, I had no issue, whatever it took to get people to come to the area, really, so I was happy to charge them up," said Penney, who also previously served as a councillor for the regional municipality. 

But since then, the province has expanded its offering of EV charging areas, including recently installing one in Fort Nelson as well as other northern and Vancouver Island communities. 

 

In a press release from earlier this month, the province says it has completed building the "Electric Highway," a network of 155 charging sites and more than 310 fast chargers that are located around 150 kilometres apart along all major roadways in B.C. This effort is part of its climate action plan, CleanBC.

All of these facilities will be in service before the end of the month, according to the province. 

"It's pretty neat," Penney said. "It looks like they've strategically located them so there should be no issues with travelling up and down the Alaska Highway now, at least from the B.C. portion, with an electric vehicle."

The province says it aims to have 10,000 public charging stations by 2030 – almost doubling the existing number as of last month.

Doug Beckett, founder of the Prince George Electric Vehicle Association, called the development exciting. He said he started driving EVs in 2009 when there were no public charging stations.

"To have the whole province providing the ability to fuel up your electric vehicle about every 150 kilometres distributed through the entire province is wonderful," he said. "It's quite a change."

WATCH | B.C. expanding electric vehicle charging network: 

B.C. expanding electric vehicle charging network

3 months ago
Duration 2:08
The province is announcing an expansion of the electric vehicle charging network in B.C. But as Sohrab Sandhu reports, some critics say this will further increase demand for energy.

He added that both EVs and their charging stations are getting better. For instance, the province says that early next year, B.C. Hydro will start introducing 400-kilowatt stations that are capable of offering 100 kilometres of charge in just two to three minutes.

But at the same time, there is also concern about the increasing demand for power, which B.C. Hydro has attributed to EVs as well as population growth, industrial development, heat pumps, and a rise in people working from home. 

The utility company put out a call for new clean energy projects in April, and is expected to award purchase agreements in December. Bids for this process closed earlier this week. 

Meanwhile, Penney said even with the new EV charging station in town, some people still stop by his auto shop in Fort Nelson. 

"They weren't even looking for a charge, but they just stop by and thank me for getting this going," he said. "[They] just want to thank me for helping other people out, so that's kind of neat."

With files from Hanna Petersen